JACKSON — Republican primary challenger Chris McDaniel said yesterday that longtime U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran is “one of the biggest spenders in Washington” and is out of touch with Mississippi.

“Sen. Cochran has a 42-year record … of being a liberal, of exploding the government’s debt, of increasing his own pay, of just about every unbelievable liberal vote one can cast,” McDaniel, 41, said during a news conference outside the Mississippi Capitol.

Republicans and Democrats hold party primaries June 3, with winners advancing to the Nov. 4 general election. Cochran, 76, is seeking another six-year term in the seat he won in 1978. He spent six years in the U.S. House before moving to the Senate, and is a former Senate Appropriations Committee chairman.

“It’s kind of unfortunate, and absurd, really, for him to suggest that somehow Sen. Cochran is not, you know, Mississippi enough,” Russell said. “After all the work Sen. Cochran has done for Mississippi over the years, for our veterans, for Katrina victims, disaster relief, for our universities, for our farmers — Sen. Cochran has worked hard for this state and has an excellent record of conservative service to Mississippi. And for Chris McDaniel to stand up there and lie about him, it’s just really sad.”

As Russell spoke, McDaniel stood to the side and listened, arms crossed. Then, he replied to what Russell had said. It was a small-scale version of what McDaniel has been saying he wants for weeks: A face-to-face debate.

“Look, here’s what it boils down to: He shouldn’t send people down here to call me a liar,” McDaniel said of Cochran.

McDaniel acknowledged that during a campaign appearance Wednesday in Ocean Springs, he said Cochran’s campaign had used a “flat-out lie” about McDaniel’s work as a lawyer.

McDaniel, who was elected to the state Legislature in 2007, said he has talked to people around the state who have never seen Cochran in person.

“Sen. Cochran needs to be home more. He needs to be around the people more,” McDaniel said.

Russell responded that Cochran is in Washington doing his job as a senator.

“He can’t be two places at once,” Russell said.

Russell also said most of McDaniel’s campaign money comes from “out-of-state, phony supporters.”

For weeks, McDaniel has been saying Cochran should accept invitations to debate on TV. Cochran told The Associated Press last month that he sees no need to debate because he believes McDaniel is distorting his record in Washington.

“If my record is what they say it is, he should have no problem wiping the floor with me in a debate,” McDaniel said. “But instead, he chooses to send surrogates over here to deliver his message.”